Traditionalist Conservatism Forum > Traditionalist Conservatism > Science and conservatism |
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JimKalb ezOP (3/26/01 6:41 pm) Reply |
Science and conservatism Anyone see the current (Winter 2001) issue of Modern Age? It seems to me the theme of the issue, science and conservative thought, is absolutely fundamental. I haven't read it all yet, but I especially liked Wolfgang Smith's piece on "Science and the Restoration of Culture." It criticizes the modern outlook from within, and that I think is a necessity. Jim Kalb |
Carrowdore Registered User (3/27/01 1:43 pm) Reply |
Is the article online? If so, what's the URL? |
JimKalb ezOP (3/28/01 11:55 am) Reply |
Re: Is the article online? No, alas. "Modern Age" is not a particularly descriptive name. Jim Kalb |
William Wleklinski Registered User (4/7/01 12:03 pm) Reply |
Re: Science and conservatism Perhaps part of the problem is that most people drawn to a website like this, and to a quarterly like Modern Age (I subscribe) loathe reading about science in any detail. Am I wrong about this? Alas, I received my issue a couple of weeks ago and have yet to read an article. I don't say this with pride. WW |
JimKalb ezOP (4/8/01 12:03 pm) Reply |
Re: Science and conservatism Interesting point. I think though it's absolutely necessary to deal with modern natural science and have something informed to say about it. The reason the left has been victorious is that they've always won by default. So I think the Modern Age issue is a step in the right direction. Jim Kalb |
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